Mentalizing Connections: The Therapist in the Hot Seat: Countertransference and Using Mentalization to Cool Down
Presented by:
Clinical Director and Director of AMBIT, Ellenhorn, LLC
Description:
As therapists, we’ve all been there- feeling confused, frustrated, hopeless, or anxious. Therapists are not superhuman and can easily feel the heat of the therapeutic seat in clinical, team, and supervisory relationships. In this presentation, we will explore what makes our seats feel “hot” through the concept of non-mentalization, and discuss how we can re-engage our mentalization capacity to cool down and better understand these experiences. We will also think together about how to bring these insights back into our work with clients, teams, and supervisees, using mentalization-based communication techniques and tools from Adaptive Mentalization-Based Integrative Therapy (AMBIT).
Learning Objectives:
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Identify how countertransference leads to heightened emotions in therapeutic settings, using the concept of non-mentalization.
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Identify their own experiences of heightened emotions in therapeutic settings as a way to normalize the experience and mentalize oneself.
- Discuss how mentalization can be lost, regained, and sustained in relationships.
- Use practical tools and techniques from Adaptive Mentalization-Based Integrative Therapy (AMBIT) to apply in therapeutic, team, and supervisory settings.
About the Series:
Join your peers for a six-part webinar series, presented by Ellenhorn and the Mentalizing Initiative, featuring speakers from Ellenhorn, the Mentalizing Initiative, Silver Hill Hospital, and Lindner Center of Hope.
This three-month series will feature thought leaders and mentalization-based treatment (MBT) experts from esteemed organizations, providing a comprehensive exploration of MBT. Explore how MBT goes beyond skill-based approaches like DBT by fostering reflective capacities and promoting lasting self-awareness and relational stability. Led by thought leaders and experts from esteemed organizations, each session will illuminate how mentalization can be applied across therapy, leadership, and education to strengthen connections with self and others.
Why Attend?
-Earn CE Credits: Gain 1.0 CE credit per one-hour session, with a total of 6.0 credits available for attending all six webinars. CE Credits for the Mentalizing Connections series are being offered by Ellenhorn. (Silver Hill Hospital is not managing CE Credits or Certificates.)
-Learn from Experts: Hear from leaders in the globally practiced and empirically supported field of MBT.
-Enhance Your Practice: Learn how to integrate mentalization principles into your clinical work to foster deeper, more meaningful client outcomes.
Don’t miss this opportunity to join your peers in advancing mentalization-based approaches.
Participants will earn 1.0 CE credits for each one-hour session with a potential total of 6.0 CEs awarded upon successful completion of all six sessions.
All sessions will take place on Zoom from 3:00pm – 4:00pm ET
Full Presentation Schedule:
- Wednesday, February 12: Introductory Session – All Presenters
- Wednesday, February 26: Attachment and Reflective Function – Jeffrey Katzman, MD
- Wednesday, March 12: Engaging Deeply: How Mentalizing Facilitates Trust & Openness in Therapy Relationships – Michael Groat, PhD, MSc
- Wednesday, March 26: BPD: The Origin of MBT – Robin Kissell, MD
- Wednesday, April 9: IRL (In Real Life): Mentalizing with Teens in Mind – Natalie Brooks, MA, LMFT
- Wednesday, April 23: The Therapist in the Hot Seat: Countertransference and Using Mentalization to Cool Down – Shelly Simpson, LCSW
Series Presenters:
Clinical Director and Director of AMBIT, Ellenhorn, LLC
Executive Board Member, Mentalizing Initiative
Interim CEO and Chief Clinical Officer
Lindner Center of Hope
Associate Professor of Psychiatry
UCLA David Geffen School of Medicine
Director of The Mentalizing Initiative
Director of Education, Silver Hill Hospital
Professor, University of New Mexico Department of Psychiatry
Adjunct Professor, Yale Department of Psychiatry